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Fwd: In Memory

To: cbailey@sprise.com, av8ford@volcano.net, chopt32@aol.com,
Subject: Fwd: In Memory
From: "Doug Anderson" <boogiewoogie12@hotmail.com>
Date: Sat, 24 Feb 2001 01:31:18 -0000
From: Jungbec@aol.com
To: boogiewoogie12@hotmail.com,

Subject: In Memory
Date: Thu, 22 Feb 2001 13:17:07 EST




   Please read all of this.          Not what you think.



     On 18 February 2001, while racing for fame and fortune, Dale Earnhardt 
died in the last lap of the Daytona 500.  It was surely a tragedy for his 
family,
  friends and fans.
    He was 49 years old with grown children, one, which was in the race.  He
was a
  winner and earned everything he had. This included more than "$41 million 
in
  winnings and ten times that from  endorsements and souvenir sales".  He 
had a
  beautiful home and a private jet.  He drove the most sophisticated cars
allowed and
  every part was inspected and replaced as soon as there was any evidence of
wear.
     This is normally fully funded by the car and team sponsors.  Today, 
there
is no TV
  station that does not constantly remind us of his tragic end and the radio
   already has a song of tribute to this winning driver.  Nothing should be
  taken away from this man, he was a professional and the best in his
  profession.  He was in a very dangerous business but the rewards were
  great.
    Two weeks ago seven U.S. Army soldiers died in a training accident when
two
  UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters collided during night maneuvers in Hawaii.
  The soldiers were all in their twenties, pilots, crewchiefs and 
infantrymen.
  Most of them lived in sub-standard housing.  If you add their actual duty
  hours (in the field, deployed) they probably earn something close to
  minimum wage.  The aircraft they were in were between 15 and 20 years old.
    Many times parts were not available to keep them in good shape due to
funding.
  They were involved in the extremely dangerous business of flying in the
  Kuhuku mountains at night.  It only gets worse when the weather moves in
  as it did that night.  Most times no one is there with a yellow or red 
flag
  to slow things down when it gets critical.  Their children where mostly
  toddlers who will lose all memory of who "Daddy" was as they grow up.
    They  died training to defend our freedom.
    I take nothing away from Dale Earnhardt but ask you to perform this 
simple
  test.  Ask any of your friends if they know who was the NASCAR driver
  killed on 18 February 2001.  Then ask them if they can name one of the 
seven
  soldiers who died in Hawaii two weeks ago.
    18 February 2001, Dale Earnhardt died driving for fame and glory at the
  Daytona 500.  The nation mourns.  Seven soldiers died training to protect
  our freedom.  No one can remember their names and most don't even remember
   the incident.



Thanks ..

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